And this year, the cuts keep on coming. By the start of 2013, Wall Street banks are expected to have anywhere from 10% to 15% fewer employees than they did at the start of this year, CNNMoney.com reports.

Check out the many banks slashing their workforces:

Deutsche Bank (NYSE:DB) is on tap to cut 1,900 people from its staff in order to reduce expenses by $3 billion.

Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS)has an unknown number of lay-offs looming, on top of the 10% cutback in employees that’s taken place over the past year and a half.

Credit Suisse (NYSE:CS) and UBS (NYSE:UBS) each announced job cuts of 3,500. The former’s is an attempt to cut $1 billion of its costs.

Bank of America (NYSE:BAC)– part of InvestorPlace’s Real America Index — is also in the middle of lay-offs that were announced late last year — a whopping 30,000 cuts.

Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) is also in the middle of executing plans announced last year that will cut 7% of its staff for a total of around 4,000 cuts.

Citigroup (NYSE:C) is also trying to control expense by slashing its workforce. The company announced last December the lay-off of 5,000-workers and another recent plan to slash 350 more from its investment banking division.